

Daffy Season

Daffy Season
Your feedback improves this guide
Your feedback highlights guides that need a second look and keeps the rating trustworthy.
Does this age rating seem accurate to you?
Sign in to vote
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
1/5
Mild
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated Looney Tunes short is built around a comic chase between Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd, using a loud, absurd, highly stylized cartoon tone rather than realistic danger. The main sensitive elements come from slapstick hunting behavior, visual threats with no lasting consequences, and a briefly eerie atmosphere when Daffy feels surrounded by a world that turns oddly obsessive and almost nightmare like because of soccer mania. The intensity stays low to mild because the tension is played for humor, the action is fast and exaggerated, and there is no realistic injury, sexual content, or meaningful strong language. Very young children could still be unsettled by the pursuit dynamic or by the moments where familiar characters seem strangely changed or less safe than usual. Overall, this fits a broad family audience, and it is likely most engaging from about age 5, while many cartoon comfortable 4 year olds could manage it with a parent nearby.
Synopsis
Daffy is ready for Duck Season, but Elmer is too immersed in his new obsession – soccer – to come hunting. Slowly the world around Daffy turns into a zombie-esque nightmare as the Tunes become obsessed with the sport.
Difficult scenes
The most notable moment for parents is when Elmer's hunting instinct returns as soon as he notices Daffy. The scene turns into a sustained chase in classic cartoon fashion, with no realism and no lasting harm, but the hunter and prey setup can still feel tense for a very young child. The synopsis also suggests that the world around Daffy shifts into a comic nightmare atmosphere as the other Tunes become obsessed with soccer. That sense of a crowd changing and familiar characters becoming oddly fixated may be more unsettling than the physical action itself for children who are sensitive to strange moods or sudden behavioral shifts.
Where to watch
No verified platform for the US market yet. We keep this section updated as availability changes.
Availability checked on Apr 03, 2026
About this title
- Format
- Short film
- Year
- 2026
- Runtime
- 6m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Directed by
- Todd Wilderman, Hamish Grieve
- Main cast
- Eric Bauza
- Studios
- Warner Bros. Pictures Animation
Content barometer
Violence
1/5
Mild
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated Looney Tunes short is built around a comic chase between Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd, using a loud, absurd, highly stylized cartoon tone rather than realistic danger. The main sensitive elements come from slapstick hunting behavior, visual threats with no lasting consequences, and a briefly eerie atmosphere when Daffy feels surrounded by a world that turns oddly obsessive and almost nightmare like because of soccer mania. The intensity stays low to mild because the tension is played for humor, the action is fast and exaggerated, and there is no realistic injury, sexual content, or meaningful strong language. Very young children could still be unsettled by the pursuit dynamic or by the moments where familiar characters seem strangely changed or less safe than usual. Overall, this fits a broad family audience, and it is likely most engaging from about age 5, while many cartoon comfortable 4 year olds could manage it with a parent nearby.
Synopsis
Daffy is ready for Duck Season, but Elmer is too immersed in his new obsession – soccer – to come hunting. Slowly the world around Daffy turns into a zombie-esque nightmare as the Tunes become obsessed with the sport.
Difficult scenes
The most notable moment for parents is when Elmer's hunting instinct returns as soon as he notices Daffy. The scene turns into a sustained chase in classic cartoon fashion, with no realism and no lasting harm, but the hunter and prey setup can still feel tense for a very young child. The synopsis also suggests that the world around Daffy shifts into a comic nightmare atmosphere as the other Tunes become obsessed with soccer. That sense of a crowd changing and familiar characters becoming oddly fixated may be more unsettling than the physical action itself for children who are sensitive to strange moods or sudden behavioral shifts.